Welcome to my card gallery! Please be sure to visit my web site at www.americasgreatboxingcards.com if you haven't already.

Navigation: Please use the scroll bar above to view the other pages. I hope you will find them informative and interesting.

If you would like more information about my boxing card encyclopedia "America's Great Boxing Cards", please go to www.americasgreatboxingcards.com. In the years since its 1st publication my book has become the reference on boxing cards. The descriptions below are short excerpts from the book, which also provides actual prices from auctions and sales on thousands of boxing cards, hundreds of images, and checklists of sets that had never been studied methodically before. Also below are card galleries of various issues, which I am providing for everyone's easy reference.

I will try to make the gallery as close to chronological as I can.

And in answer to a question I frequently get, no, the cards here are not for sale. This is a museum page dedicated to public education; I don't even own many of them. Wish I did. If you are interested in buying boxing cards please use the menu bar at the top to go to the boxing cards for sale page.

Final Note: I moved the strip cards to the Boxing Strip Card page.

Final Final Note: Please look on the Exhibit card page for Exhibit cards of boxers.

1Pre-1870 John C. Heenan CDV by Fredricks. This is the earliest verifiable boxing card. Until the late 1850's the photographic technology did not permit commercial scale, affordable production of photographs. Fredricks was one of the first to make albumen images, a skill he learned in France and brought to the States in 1855. By the time this card was issued as part of his commercially produced "Specialite" series of famous personages, Fredricks owned a large studio and gallery in New York City. His work is featured in a number of museum collections, including the Smithsonian.

2N167 Jem Carney. One of four cards issued as part of N167 by Goodwin, it is the first series of boxing cards inserted into packages of cigarettes.

31887 N28 Allen & Ginter Jimmy Carney. N28 cards are the most common of the 19th Century tobacco boxing cards and among the easiest to collect in high grade (ex or better) because they are printed on thick, high quality cardboard. The set consists of 50 cards, ten of which depict boxers. On the card backs is a checklist of the issue.

4The great John L. Sullivan's N28 card. I feel it is his finest representation on a 19th century lithographic card.

5N29 Jack McGee. Following the success of the N28 series of fifty cards, Allen & Ginter issued a second series, which Burdick dubbed N29. We know it is a second series because it says so right on the card backs. N29 cards are more difficult to find than N28 cards but still readily collected.

6N29 Allen & Ginter Patsey Kerrigan.

7N43 Frank Murphy. Acting on the old adage that more of a good thing is better, Allen & Ginter re-used the images of the N29 set to create the set that Burdick catalogued as N43. The set features the fronts of the N29 cards within oversized cards that depict colorful boxing and decorative paraphernalia alongside. These cards are large, even bigger than modern cards, and were used in 20-packs of cigarettes, as stated on the card reverses. They are in very high demand.

8This is an album page from the 2nd series of Allen & Ginter champions albums, ACC designation A18.

9N162 Old Judge & Gypsy Queen Charlie Mitchell. There are five boxers in this colorful and extremely popular multisport lithograph set from Goodwin: Jack Dempsey, John L. Sullivan, Jake Kilrain, Jem Smith and Charlie Mitchell. All five are IBHOF members. The card backs contain a checklist. N162’s are moderately difficult but not rare.

10N162 Old Judge & Gypsy Queen Jack Dempsey.

No, this is not the heavyweight champ. This is the original Jack Dempsey, a great middleweight champ nicknamed the Nonpariel. The other fellow is William Harrison Dempsey. He took the name in tribute to the Nonpariel and it stuck.

11N174 Jack Dempsey. The second major boxing issue from Goodwin consists of albumen photographs in nine formats; the set is very complex. Cards with the rectangular bottom logo are sometimes found with a distinctly pink hue. I have no idea nor, frankly, does anyone else, whether only certain boxers have cards in certain styles, and to state otherwise is to speculate. I have a comprehensive checklist in my book but new variations do surface. N174 cards sell for high prices when they are found.

12N174 Gypsy Queen Tug Wilson. Issued only with two formats, GQs are scarcer than OJs. The thick-skulled Wilson came to the US from England, stood in with Sullivan for long enough to win a $1,000 challenge purse for lasting, and returned to England to open a grocery business with the money.

13N174 Peter Jackson. This format of N174 has the pink cards. Jackson was the best of the 19th century black heavyweight contenders, denied a shot by Sullivan. He and Corbett fought to a draw.

14N174 George Godfrey. He is misidentified as "Joe" Godfrey. The most common format N174. Godfrey was another black contender. This and the Peter Jackson are the earliest known cards of black boxers, so they bring a premium from specialists. Godfrey was elected to the Bare Knuckles Boxing HOF.

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16A John Wood cabinet card of Godfrey from the same photo session as the Old Judge card's photo. Cabinet cards were populaly issued in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. They are called “cabinet” card or “premium” card because their size usually exceeds 4” x 6” and were often displayed in curio cabinets. Many were issued to promote various organizations and businesses. Some were even issued by boxers to promote themselves, or sold individually by companies capitalizing on the card collecting craze to sell mass-produced images of celebrities.

17N174 Bob Fitzsimmons. Sorry for the lousy scan but this card is rare and was issued in Australia.

18N174 large screen Gypsy Queen. There are 7 known cards with the large GQ legend with only 1 example of each fighter known.

19N174 large screen Gypsy Queen Willie Clark.

20Old Judge card with rare back advertising, likely an Australian or UK issue.

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221887 W.S. Kimball Champions of Games and Sports (N184)Patsy Cardiff. Not to be outdone by its competitors at Allen & Ginter and Goodwin, W. S. Kimball & Co. issued its own set of champions cards. There are five boxers. The card fronts are found with or without the company name wrapped around the portrait of the subject.

23N184 John L. Sullivan, with logo around the head. These are the rarest of the regular tobacco sized multisport champions lithographed issues and owing to thin borders and weak cardboard are very hard to find in nice shape.

24N150 John L. Sullivan. One of four poses found in the issue.

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27N157 The Sunny South. Boxer is likely Paddy Duffy, an IBHOF member.

28N692 a smaller, tougher version of N157 w/ different branding

291889 Kinney Hold To The Light Metamorphic (N223)John L. Sullivan. This is a unique, extremely rare issue. The cards’ images change when held to sunlight. The Sullivan, gets long hair and a beard when he changes. It is a layered set of images on thin stock and is vulnerable to damage.

301889 S.F. Hess & Co. (N332) Jack Havlin. S.F. Hess, a Rochester, NY company, issued a very rare series consisting of an unknown number of blank-backed photographic cards of boxers and other celebrities in a format very similar to N174. The issue is so rare that it is meaningless to speak of the 80+ known cards as a set.

31N332 S.F. Hess Charlie Mitchell. It was not uncommon for parents to lop off the tobacco ads on cards and give the images to their kids. When the card is rare it can make identification a challenge. This one was sold as an unidentified photo of an anonymous boxer and sold for less than 1% of what a Hess would normally cost.

321887 Lorillard’s Mechanics Delight (N269) Jimmy Elliot. Lorillard issued this sought after set of fifty numbered boxing cards in 1887. Personally, my favorite 19th century set; I appreciate the broad scope of subjects, the numbering, and the write ups on the backs of the cards.

34N269 Lorillard Mechanics Delight John L. Sullivan. One of two Sullivans in the set, both carrying the same card number.

35N269 Lorillard Mechanics Delight Bill Poole. A gangster and nativist political enforcer immortalized in Herbert Asbury's "The Gangs of New York" who was drawn on to create the "Butcher Bill" character in the movie. Murdered by Irish gangsters affiliated with John Morrissey (our next card subject), his last words were "I die a true American." His funeral procession drew thousands of onlookers.

36John "Old Smoke" Morrissey. The Tammany politico and gangster was one of the toughest bare knuckles brawlers of pre-Civil War NYC and founded the Saratoga Springs track. Served in Congress and died a very wealthy man. His crew murdered Bill Poole, though not on his orders. He and Poole had a bitter blood feud based on Poole's nativist sentiments.

371889 History of Poor Boys and Other Famous People (N79) Jake Kilrain: Although not really cards, the two booklets in this series that depict boxers are popularly collected by 19th century boxing card collectors. The booklets were produced by Duke and show various Duke products in addition to detailed biographies of the celebrity subjects. The elaborate cover art is what makes these items popular among collectors. The two boxer subjects are John L. Sullivan and Jake Kilrain. The set is popularly treated as an 1888 issue, but that is clearly wrong; the last paragraph of the Kilrain biography states that he and Sullivan had signed in January 1889 for a July 1889 championship bout.

381893 Lorillard Red Cross Long Cut Tobacco (N266)Choyinski[sic] and Goddard. The set designated N266 by Burdick consists of 25 known unnumbered cards. It is one of the easiest sets to date; 1893 is printed right on the fronts of the cards in very small, faint print below the “Red Cross” name. Each oversized “tall boy” card depicts a match between two fighters and illustrates a specific move. Some of the illustrations show blows permitted under the rules of the London Prize Ring (“L.P.R.”), but not under the modern rules for gloved prize fights. Card backs contain a short blurb about the fighters and fight depicted, and a huge Red Cross advertisement. These colorful cards are larger than average tobacco cards but smaller than postcards, trade cards or cabinet cards, which accounts for both their desirability and their difficulty in better conditions.

39N266 Fitzsimmons v. Dempsey. One of the two keys to the set showing Jack Dempsey and Bob Fitzsimmons, who fought for the middleweight crown. Fitz held two titles at once (middle and heavy) at a time when there were only three weight divisions.

40N266 Murphy v. Weir

41N266 McAuliffe v. Myers

42N266 Hall v. Pritchard

43N266 Frazier and Daly

44N266 De Baum and Campbell

45N266 Dawson and Needham

46N266 Chambers and Clark

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481895 Mayo Cut Plug (N310)Joe Chonskia [sic]. Mayo produced a series of 35 subjects with photographic depictions of many of the biggest stars of the day. The set features two front styles: names at the top and names at the bottom of the image.

The fighter whose name was routinely mangled by the card companies, San Francisco native Joseph Bartlett Choynski [ko-yin-ski] was the first great Jewish-American fighter. Although he weighed about 170 he was a heavyweight who fought most every contender and champion, and defeated Jack Johnson early in Johnson's career.

49Mayo Jim Corbett, name at bottom variation.

50Mayo Jim Hall. There are extreme print variations found in the name at bottom Mayo issue. They are detailed in my book. Ones like this, missing the artistic enhancements, are the rarest.

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52N310 Joe Walcott

53Old Chocolate Godfrey, name at bottom variety.

542012 HOFer [finally] Jake Kilrain, name at bottom variation

55Uncut partial strip of N310.

56Another uncut N310 strip

57All three of the N310 uncut strips shown here originally fit together as one strip but were separated over time. I know of only one other uncut N310 strip.

58This is a carte de viste (CDV) of Jem Carney. About the size of a modern photograph it was produced in the 1890s.

59N537 Little Rhody Jim Corbett

601890s Jim Corbett CDV.

61N386 Spaulding & Merrick John L. Sullivan

62Richard K. Fox, publisher of the Police Gazette, was a well known photographer and prize fight promoter. He was responsible for a large issue of cabinet cards under his own studio name as well as a set issued under the Police Gazette name. He also made up several CDVs of himself, like this one.

63Richard K. Fox cabinet of Bob Fitzsimmons.

64Richard K. Fox cabinet Tom Hyer. Hyer was one of the first American heavyweight champs, winning acclaim in a 101 round (yes, that is correct) bare knuckles title fight in the 1840s. He successfully defended against Yankee Sullivan in the 1851 and then retired to run his bar and gang in New York City.

65Another Fox cabinet of Bob Fitzsimmons, this one on a rare white mount.

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74This cabinet of HOFer Charlie Mitchell was issued as part of a set of boxers by The Champion and is designated in the ACC as M125.

75M125 cabinet of Australian boxer Frank Slavin.

76Police Gazette John L. Sullivan. Richard Fox issued a multitude of cabinet cards under his studio and also issued a series for his newspaper The Police Gazette. The latter have the ACC designation M128.

77M128 Jake Kilrain

78John Wood Studio cabinet card of Jack [Nonpariel] Dempsey. An image from the same sitting was used to make his S.F. Hess card.

79Stevengraph silks of Kilrain and Smith. An English issue of four cabinet-cards that frame very finely woven silk fighter portraits about the size of a bank check.

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811895 Newsboy Cabinets (N566)Peter Jackson. The National Tobacco Works issued a gigantic set of several hundred cabinet (4 1/4” x 6 1/2”) cards in the early 1890’s, popularly listed as an 1895 issue. I know of 4 boxing subjects, John L. Sullivan, Jim Corbett, Peter Jackson and Bob Fitzsimmons, depicted on at least 14 different cards.

84John L. Sullivan cabinet card. One of many types of souvenir cards of the first true fistic superstar, this particular format is found with at least three different poses.

85John L. Sullivan trade card. This cabinet sized card is usually found imprinted on front or back with a local merchant's advertisement, a common use for trade cards in the late 19th century.

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871890s X-Zalia Jim Corbett. A snake oil of the worst sort, Corbett plugged it for a fee.

88What we have here is somewhat of a mystery but is generally accepted as being some kind of composite sample card associated with the N150 series.

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931904 Battling Nelson. Styled like a cabinet card but printed. Includes his record to 1904 on the back.

94Jack O'Brien's card

95Jim Jeffries, the California Grizzly, in his prime in 1899.

961904 Jeffries-Munroe cabinet card by Sporting Life magazine. Unlike 'true' cabinet cards, this one is printed rather than photographic, and double-sided. Only one specimen is known.

97ca.1909 James J. Jeffries self-issued cabinet card w/Sarony image. Sarony was a well-known photographer of athletes. Jeffries made several cabinets in conjunction with his 1910 comeback.

98T218 Sam Langford. Perhaps the most widely collected T-type boxing cards are the T218 cards of Champion Athletes and Prizefighters, issued with various American Tobacco Company products. The T218 cards are beautiful examples of turn of the century lithography. The cards measure approximately 2 ½ x 2 7/8 inches, and typically contain a short write-up and fight statistics on the backs.

99T218 Jack Johnson, side view. In my opinion the T218 set is the nicest looking of the 20th century lithographic sets.

100T218 Stanley Ketchell

101T218 Sam Langford Tolstoi back. Mecca is the most common brand of T218. Hassan is slightly more difficult to find than Mecca, say on a 55:45 ratio. The Tolstoi back is rare.

102T218 Willie Lewis.

103T219 Willie Lewis. The T219 set is a cut down version of T218 with only 50 boxers. Compare this card with the T218 Lewis image for the cropping. The basic cards in the set are the Honest Long Cut (“HLC”) brand cards. The Miners Extra brand is uncommon. The Red Cross brand is rarely seen.

104T220 Charlie Goldman. Issued with Mecca and Tolstoi cigarettes, the 50-card set designated as T220 by Jefferson Burdick in the American Card Catalog is one of the two “basic” boxing card sets from pre-World War I era of the 20th Century.

105T220 Silver Borders Charlie Goldman. A significant border variation exists in the T220 set. All cards are commonly found with a white border. For some reason, 26 Mecca brand cards were printed as well with a silver border.

106T220 Mecca Silver Borders Joe Coburn. Note the man at the left.

107T220 Coburn white border. The man’s image clearly was removed after the silver bordered printing, since the plant leaves that replaced him still form his silhouette. Why the American Tobacco Company bothered to remove this man from the picture is unknown. It proves that the silver cards were printed first. I have never seen a white bordered Coburn with the man at the left intact.

108T220 Silver Borders Kid Lavigne.

109T220 Silver Borders Mike Donovan. This card blew my mind when discovered early in 2006. Until then all catalogs carried the silver bordered variation of T220 as a 25-card subset of the 50-card issue including Jack Goodman, which does not exist. This card was the 26th silver border discovered and is one of 2 known specimens. The silver set consists of 25 cards.

110T220 Silver Borders Young Erne

111T220 Silver Borders Willie Beecher

112T220 Freddie Welsh Tolstoi back

1131910 Dixie Queen T223 John L. Sullivan. The same 50 cards in T220 were issued in a smaller format on coarser paper as Dixie Queen premiums. They are quite rare.

114T224/T229 Pet/Kopec Cigarettes Monte Attell. Abe's brother Monte was a title holder. Pet and Kopec were West Coast brands with very limited distribution. Pet brand cards are rare; Kopecs are all but impossible to find.

115T225 Jas. J. Jeffries. This series has 10 back variations. The gory details are in my book.

116T226 Red Sun Puglistic [sic] Subjects Willie Lewis. This set of 50 cards is very tough to find and very desirable; a high grade set of 50 brought $57,605.23 at auction some years ago.

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118T227 Abe Attell. A multisport set of 24 known (1 missing) cards with 5 boxers issued in a large format similar to modern cards with images not seen on any other T cards, the T227 Honest Long Cut or Miners Extra brand set is very desirable, especially because of its four baseball players. Abe Attell was a Jewish-American champion who was the go-between in the 1919 Black Sox scandal.

119T227 Ad Wolgast

120T227 Johnny Coulon. Every boxer in T227 was a champion and is in the IBHOF. The others not shown here are Frankie Klaus and Jack Johnson.

1281909 Jeffries Championship Souvenir Playing Cards Bob Fitzsimmons. The W.P. Jeffries Co. created a really nice set of playing cards depicting boxers and boxing matches from the past. The card back shows Jeffries, fat and happy in a bowler hat.

129This card was enclosed in the deck of Jeffries cards and is tougher to find; I suppose it was routinely discarded.

130Jeff made himself the Joker.

131Sullivan was the King; Johnson was the actual champion at the time. He does not merit an individual card, undoubtedly due to his race.

132Another card from the set showing Jeffries about to fight Fitzsimmons for the title. The reference to bearhood is a play on one of his nicknames, the California Grizzly.

133E75 has 20 line-drawn cards issued by the American Caramel Co. The cards are checklisted on the back. It is one of the most common caramel sets.

134E75 McCoy

135A little tougher than E75 are the American Caramel Co.'s E76 issue, also of 20 cards with checklist backs. They can be distinguished based on typeface and fonts.

136E76 Nelson

137E77 Al Kaufman. Issued by the American Caramel Company, the same maker of the E75 and E76 sets, this particular set has 24 cards including two wrestlers and is very tough to find.

138E78 Frank Klaus. Cards from this set are rare. The card fronts are similar in format to the E79/80 cards, while the card backs are very similar to the E75/76 cards. There is no branding or manufacturers designation on E78 cards. A checklist of the 25 cards in the issue is provided on the card backs.

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140E79 Marvin Hart. E79 is one of the most widely collected boxing caramel card sets. E79 card back contain a partial checklist and reference 27 "Scrappers", giving the set its nickname. Card backs are printed in black; very rarely will be seen in red.

141E79 red back. Some call these E80 but Burdick treated them as E79. Really, the issue is academic since they should be collected together as a two or three series single issue.

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144E79 Jack O'Brien and Partner

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149E80 Attells. E80 is one of the more difficult 20th century boxing sets. E80 references 44 Scrappers on the card backs, which have a complete checklist of the set. There is overlap between E79 and E80; very likely the 79 red backs were some of the cards listed on the E80 backs.

150Typical E80 back on a card not issued with E79

151Normally, this card has a lot going for it--Jack Johnson from a very difficult pre-war E set (E80). What makes this special is the stamping on the card back. I've seen this before--in a museum, when I went to research my book at the Met's Burdick Collection. The stylized "B" and the "Jeff B." indicate that this card was once the possession of none other than the creator of the American Card Catalog, Jefferson Burdick.

152ca. 1910 Jim Jeffries uncatalogued card. A candy issue from around the time of the Johnson fight, these cards are quite difficult to find.

155Although this strip card set uses the E79 and E95 art it is really a card cut from an advertising sheet for Philadelphia Caramel Company, which made the sets

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157Heavyweight champ Tommy Burns was also a top lacrosse player. Here is his C60 card.

1581915 Susini Jack Johnson [Cuba]

1591915 Susini Billy Wells [Cuba]

1601919 photo card of the Dempsey-Willard fight from a series of cards issued as both PCs and PC-sized blank-backed cards.

1611919 Underwood & Underwood Jack Dempsey: Underwood & Underwood was known for licensing photos. Many baseball sets from the 1920’s have the U&U copyright on their images. Apparently, U&U also tried its hand at producing postcard-sized cards of its own. Dempsey and Willard are the known subjects, indicating an issue date ca. 1919.

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1631927 York Caramel (E211) King Tut (obviously not his real name). This rare set of cards depicts fighters of the era. Burdick catalogued it as E211.

1641927 York Caramel (E211) Frankie Genaro. The Burdick Collection at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York has only 2 E211 cards.

2031930 Chocolatin Mercedes Papke and Lewis. A very rare issue from Uruguay.

204This and the next photo show the Mercedes boxing series as it lays out on the album pages.

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206Jeannette and MacVea from the Mercedes set. These are counterfeits; South American sellers will often make photocopies or laser prints of partial sets and glue them into the album to give the impression of a complete set.

207Papke and Lewis as they looked glued down.

208E. Quintana issued a large series of boxing and baseball cards in 1931. The baseball cards include Martin Dihigo cards that sell for thousands. The boxers include Sixto Escobar and Pedro Montanez.

2091931 Quintana back. There are a couple of varieties of backs depending on series of issue.

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211One of the people shown is Pincho Gutierrez, who trained Kid Chocolate.

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2141920s caramel wrapper from Argentina

2151920s caramel wrapper from Argentina

2161920s caramel wrapper from Argentina

2171924 Benny Leonard standup card from the Flying Fists serial. Two known examples, one with the stand part torn off.

2181924 W511 strip card Jack Dempsey and Jack Kearns. Red variation.

219This is a mail response card used by Pathe to respond to fans who wrote to Jack Dempsey care of the studio.

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2211926 Weber Bakery Gene Tunney. From a movie stars set. Tunney is shown from his role in The Fighting Marine.

222This is the header card for a series of German transfer stamps depicting the 1927 Dempsey-Tunney fight.

22316 of the 20 stamps

224ca. 1929 or 1930 E282 Goudey Oh Boy Gum Jack Dempsey and Tom Mix. From a series of at least 30 movie-related cards.

225A 1920s Hollywood still of Dempsey used to make the E282 Oh Boy card.

2261920s French PC made from the same movie studio publicity still. From a global perspective, Dempsey was the most popular athlete in the world in the 1920s, proven by the many PCs of him from around the world.

230Loose-Wiles, the maker of Rippled Wheat cereal, issued a number of different items relating to Jack Dempsey in 1936 when he signed on as a national spokesman.

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232R308 Tattoo Orbit Primo Carnera

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234ca. 1936 H-Unc. La Salle Hats cards. A set of 8 cards given in an envelope as a promotional device for haberdasheries.

235This would be 7 of the 8 cards in the set plus an original envelope.

236La Salle Hats Kid Lavigne

2371936 Indiana Sport Young Perez.

2381936 Indiana Sport Humery-Berg, blue variation

2391937 Kelloggs Pep Cereal Tommy Loughran

2401937 Kelloggs Pep Cereal Jess Willard

2411937 Kelloggs Pep Cereal Jack Sharkey

2421937 Kelloggs Pep Cereal Jack Delaney

2431937 Kelloggs Pep Cereal James Corbett

2441930s Rogers & Peet Gene Tunney.

Issued by a haberdashery (clothing store) ca. 1930 in packs of 4, these blank-backed cards are quite difficult to find. Four boxers are featured: Tunney, Schmeling, Sharkey and Baer

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2471942 Chicago Tribune Joe Louis, from a set of 70 WWII related strip cards issued in the newspaper with corresponding album.

248Uncatalogued 1940s arcade card of Georges Carpentier. These cards were issued in Coney Island and sold only at that location. They are quite rare. I have seen a few of them offered over the years. The image was stolen from the Blue Boxers exhibit set.

2491925 Blue Boxer Carpentier.

250The Coney Island cards are occasionally found in pairs.

251Coney Island Louis and Johnson. The pictures in the set were sourced from a variety of other issues and publicity photos.

257reversed image of Zale from the Pep issue. There are also cropping variations.

2581948 Leaf Jack Dempsey. The 1948 Leaf boxing set is one of the two post-World War II boxing sets issued by a major gum manufacturer (the other is the 1951 Topps Ringside set) before 1990. It consists of 49 different cards, plus an unissued extremely rare Rocky Graziano (with fewer than ten known examples, most collectors do not even consider the Graziano to be part of the set).

2591948 Leaf Joe Louis. Printing quality is the biggest condition concern with 1948 Leaf cards. The card stock itself is fairly thick and holds up well, but the printing can vary from atrocious to breathtakingly nice. Front image registration is the single worst problem with the set. The set was printed in three passes -- black, red and blue – and relatively few of the cards actually align perfectly for all three phases. When the printing lines up exactly, the result is a crisp, sharp image and a very nice card indeed, but if any phase misses the mark by even a millimeter, the entire image is thrown off. Many collectors of this issue will sacrifice corner sharpness or centering to get a properly printed card. The card fronts also suffer from inking irregularities.

260This four-card strip may be a salesman sample.

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2621951 Berk Ross Hit Parade of Champions (W532)Sugar Ray Robinson. This ugly multisport set was issued in boxed sets for sale directly to children in 1951, in four series. The cards came in two-card panels with a perforation between them.

2631951 Ringside Abe Attell. This set was Topps’ sole full-fledged venture into the boxing market. The 1951 Ringside set was issued in two 48-card series. The second series is roughly twice as hard to find as the first series.

2641951 Ringside Tiger Flowers. This card is very popular and sells for a considerable premium.

2651951 Ringside Barney Ross. Card fronts show a color image of the boxer (a painted photo called a “Flexichrome” was used) with the name and division in a box. The illustration quality varies with the quality of the source materials. Champions of the past have gold laurels surrounding a plate with the title and dates of title above the name. The present-day champions have a crown on the card.

2661951 Ringside Gene Tunney. Card #95, Tunney is very tough to find. Although not short prints, two other cards are notorious problem cards: Joe Louis (#88) frequently has terrible centering left to right, and John L. Sullivan (#69) is often off-centered towards the bottom.

267The Ringside box.

268A two-card panel, sold in nickel packs.

269An 8-card salesman sample. This one shows Marciano's rookie card.

270The back of the sample panel.

271Kid Herman newsstand issue (1946-1970s): Issued in New York City by boxer Kid Herman, whose image appears on the back of the envelope in which they came. The set was sold originally in a packet for $0.25 at the Kid's newsstands and also peddled at Stillman's Gym, and was updated updated on different papers through the early 1970s. See my blog for more details.

272Kid Herman Tommy Burns, original format printing

273Over the next 20 years or so after the initial issue of the set, Herman reprinted the set and issued new cards for the new champs, in ever worsening quality. Interim reprints shifted from thin chipboard to heavier polished stock similar to Exhibit cards. The last printings were on a slick paper and weren't even sized consistently.

274Kid Herman Jack Dempsey. Printed on thicker cardboard like an exhibit card, often mistaken for them. The earlier printings of Dempsey feature a different pose.

275Kid Herman Schmeling

276Kid Herman card of Jack Sharkey. The earlier printings of Sharkey feature a different pose.

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279Joe Louis made after his retirement as the date "1946-" has been removed from the card.

280Kid Herman card of Ezzard Charles from a later printing. Trimmed down, probably a sample.

281Kid Herman Walcott, also a trimmed down sample

282Here is a Marciano card from a later printing.

283Patterson Kid Herman card, later printing

284Here is the Sonny Liston from a later printing of the Kid Herman set.

285The most elusive and valuable of the Kid Herman cards, printed post-Ali's 1967 loss of his belt and freedom for refusing induction into the army. Same pose as the 1960s Exhibit card.

290The Homogenized Bond Bread card art was sourced from a variety of publicity photos of the era. Here is the Cerdan. The "deceased" notation is something that its former owner added to the piece.

291This Cerdan is about 7 x 10 and comes from a multisport picture pack. It is often misidentified as a Homogenized Bond premium; really it is just the same art used for another product.

292A Graziano from the picture pack. Not known as a Homogenized Bond Bread card.

293A Primo Carnera from the picture pack; same image as on the Homogenized Bond card.

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2951950 Bowman Wild Man Sullivan v. Kilrain

2961951 Berk Ross Sugar Ray Robinson. One of six boxers in this two-card per panel multisport set, issued in boxed form.

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3081930s Adam Hats premium, type 1. ACC designation H815.

3091930s Adam Hats premium, type 2

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324Another mens clothing issue, this one by Slidewell Bows, a tie-maker.

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326Now this is an interesting example of how a piece made for one purpose was reused. Bob Murphy's Slidewell Bows advertising piece had a new piece of copy stripped onto it to make this fight poster, which was then blown up and printed. Note the National studio logo at the bottom right that is not in the Slidewell ad piece.

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328Slim Jim was a brand of Slidewell Bows and several boxers were used to promote it.

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3351951 Bread For Energy Billy Graham. I really like the proto-Pop Art designs of these labels.

3361951 Bread For Energy Kid Gavilan

3371954 Brasserie Motte Cordonnier Laurent Dauthille. The issuer was a French brewery that sponsored a sweepstakes for a trip to its brewery in what was then French colonial Africa.

3381954 Brasserie Motte Cordonnier Robert Cohen. Cohen was a world champion. I am absolutely certain on the ID of Dauthille and this one but the IDs of the fights in the ensuing images are tentative.